Wikipedia:Articles for creation/2007-09-07
Marksmanship Principles
This request for creation has been declined. Please do not modify it. |
---|
This is an archived discussion. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section. |
Henry Joseph Chaisson
This request for creation has been declined. Please do not modify it. |
---|
This is an archived discussion. Please do not modify it. |
Tom Maurer
This request for creation has been declined. Please do not modify it. |
---|
This is an archived discussion. Please do not modify it. |
"Plug Me In"
This request for creation has been declined. Please do not modify it. |
---|
This is an archived discussion. Please do not modify it. |
Predator X (Marvel Comics)
This request for creation has been accepted. Please do not modify it. |
---|
This is an archived discussion. Please do not modify it. |
Ashley Flewelling
This request for creation has been declined. Please do not modify it. |
---|
This is an archived discussion. Please do not modify it. |
Deverens, James Severs
Maj. Deverens, James Severs was a United States Army operative tried for involuntary manslaughter for the deaths of three non-combatants riding in a vehicle with Shiek Muhammoud Kallin when Deverens' team launched an assault in March of 2002. All four passengers were killed in the ensuing fire fight and the government of Saudia Arabia eventually requested the team be charged under terms of the Kingdom's agreement with the United States.
Deverens was found not guilty and disappeared in the following months.
In addition; Deverens was stationed in El Salvador in the winter of 1981 when three heads of the resistance were found murdered in a cafe in Challa.
Deverens was in Nicaragua during the Danial Ortega administration posing as a reporter.
Deverens was in Lebanon in 1999 when a Syrian agent and her husband were shot by a sniper in Beirut.
Deverens was in northern Malaysia when a radical cleric disappeared on a 20 km trip between villages. The cleric's car was found in the jungle over a year later, burned and without plates.
Deverens taught at the infamous College of The Americas from 1992-2000
Sources
1) Saudi Times (english edition) 2) New York Times, College of the Americas, March 2003 3) Freedom of information documents from US Army 2004-7
71.112.88.240 02:05, 7 September 2007 (UTC)
hair follicle drug tests
on average the hair follicle drug test can detect drugs within ninety days of drug abuse
Sources
http://www.ipassedmydrugtest.com/hair_drug_test_FAQ.asp http://www.ipassedmydrugtest.com/hair_drug_test_FAQ.asp http://www.mbdetox.com/category8/default.html 74.37.155.190 02:24, 7 September 2007 (UTC)
Mary Jane Hawes
Mary Jane Holmes (1825-1907) was an American author who wrote many popular novels.
Mary Jane Hawes was born in Brookfield Massachusetts in 1825. At age 13 she taught in a school. She married Daniel Holmes and they settled in Versailles, Kentucky. In 1854 she wrote her first novel, Tempest and Sunshine. The theme for most of her novels was domestic life. She died in 1907.
Books
- Tempest and Sunshine (New York, 1854),
- The English Orphans (1855)
- The Homestead on the Hillside, and other Tales (Auburn, 1855)
- Lena Rivers (1856)
- Meadow Brook (New York, 1857)
- Dora Deane, or the East India Uncle, and Maggie Miller, or Hagar's Secret (1858)
- Cousin Maude and Rosamond (1860)
- Marian Grey (1863)
- Hugh Worthington (1863)
- Darkness and Daylight (1864)
- The Cameron Pride, or Purified by Suffering (1867)
- The Christmas Font, a story for young folks (1868)
- Rose Mather, a Tale of the War (1868)
- Ethelyn's Mistake (1869)
- Millbank (1871)
- Edna Browning (1872)
- West Lawn, and the Rector of St. Mark's (1874)
- Mildred (1877)
- Daisy Thornton (1878)
- Forest House (1879)
- Chateau d'or (1880)
- Red Bird (1880)
- Madeline (1881)
- Queenie Hatherton (1883)
- Christmas Stories (1884)
- Bessie's Fortune (1885)
- Gretchen (1887)
Sources
http://www.famousamericans.net/maryjaneholmes/ http://etext.virginia.edu/eaf/authors/mjh.htm http://chnm.gmu.edu/dimenovels/authors/holmes.html
24.15.188.231 02:46, 7 September 2007 (UTC)
Henry Joseph Chaisson
Henry " Joseph" Chaisson (born December 13 in Granville, NY) was catcher for the 1983-1986 conference title winners and 1985 College World Series participants University of South Carolina. A 6'3" right-hander, Chaisson posted a career batting average of .445, while batting in 195 RBI's and 65 home runs. Chaisson was named Coaches Poll, Baseball America, and Sporting News All-American. Chaisson graduated High School in 1982, lettering in football, baseball, and basketball. Chaisson was named New York All-State first team for both football and baseball. Offered scholarships from University of Tennessee, University of Georgia, Northwestern, Maryland, and UNC-Chapel Hill, and a commission to West Point, Chaisson chose baseball for the University of South Carolina. === Sources === Ants & Black Magic (1985) The 1984 Gamecocks: Fire 216.9.250.100 03:17, 7 September 2007 (UTC)